Pastoralism has suffered untold abuses in the implementation of national policy and laws before in the incorporation of bills of rights in the constitution. These provisions allowed freedom of association that enable formation of CSOs and NGOs, some of which based their interventions into policies and legal issues that denied pastoralists of the rights to engage into livelihood processes through access to, management of, and benefit from land and resources entailed in them. This study employed a policy analysis approach to the implementation of positive provision that had positive outcome to pastoralists and pastoralism.
This study has five sections; the introduction, background to the study, rangeland resource management by pastoralists, policy environment; land policy; wildlife policy and act and forest policy as well as tourism policy. In addition a discussion on livestock policy was offered and lastly conclusions and recommendations.
A Study on the Impact of National Policies, Processes on Pastoralism in Tanzania